You can give a phone with very restricted social media
My child under 10 has a tablet.
She can message the family, draw, make videos, take pictures, has a album, some musics.
Some, limited time, video cartoons and mostly educational games
Companies should provide better tolling to help parents follow their children online. Especially now with AI would be quite easy to make smart policies
If you read something written by a field specialist you don't just learn something, you get the core of the issue. All the mechanics that lead to it, tradeoffs, and the possible paths for the future. That makes the book relevant for many years
Though it is hard to make ourselves read long form content nowadays where short content is pushed to us every day
Also seeing so much short content make us think the books are outdated. When in reality it keeps churning the same implementation details and getting us burned out for not progressing. And bleeding keeps being reinvented on set concepts
And might be a good hiring tip, read a book a year, put it on your CV
You get new career prespectives/vision, opportunities, libraries ideas, companies ideas, research ideas
Remember 10 years ago at big company, the external audit company required picture evidence that the electronic equipment was being destroyed. We requested it to the disposal company, and they sent us pictures of a guy with a hammer smashing a motherboard
The whole situation so ridiculous and bureaucratic
I like them both, both interesting, quite similar, both with corner cases
Annoyingly both fail at basic stuff like falling back the graphics card, something Debian had solved 10 years ago, no configs needed, no matter Intel/NVIDIA/AMD. Even without the correct driver or firmware falling back to VESA or fbdev should be a given. Never had so many black screens as now. Even Windows has done better job at giving you a basic resolution while you install the drivers
Or maybe it's just the state of the Linux ecosystem, with the introduction of Wayland and NVIDIA open drivers, causing regressions
Also the unintuitive inverse of traditional package management, where if you want to update one package, all the system updates by default
Which increases the amount of bugs, having frequent updates to a stable system
To make it better you can add 2 channels, and call them nixos-stable v24 nixos-latest v25, keeping most of the system one version down increases stability a lot
Of course the incorporated Grub boot build choices is great to revert back to a working system
I really like the the separation Guix makes on having close source being a concern of a separate project
But both of them are equally easy to install open source only or include proprietary
> But both of them are equally easy to install open source only or include proprietary
Unless it really dramatically changed recently, I don't think that's true. Look, here's the official manual page that describes exactly how to enable use of the non-free packages that are right there in the main nixpkgs repo:
And here's the guix equivalent, maintained in a completely separate repo that you're not allowed to talk about, document, or refer to in any official channels: https://gitlab.com/nonguix/nonguix
Of course they are. Copy and paste a text snippet to your configuration, and run the cli to refresh
Being a separate repo is absolutely OK. Just like installing Nixos's own Home-Manager
Or add other people channels, like adding PPA on Ubuntu/debian. Or run flakes...
Nixos is possibly makes it more confusing by having the documentation recommend `nix-channel --add` instead of the declarative approach. Having the standard declarative, and having flakes on top
And you should probably want to create your own channel. On the week I installed Guix immediately created my channel and packaged ZimWiki
> Of course they are. Copy and paste a text snippet to your configuration, and run the cli to refresh
Even in the best case, that requires you to know about it. When you're not allowed to document the option or even mention it in official support channels, that's harder.
> Being a separate repo is absolutely OK. Just like installing Nixos's own Home-Manager
> Or add other people channels, like adding PPA on Ubuntu/debian. Or run flakes...
> And you should probably want to create your own channel. On the week I installed Guix immediately created my channel and packaged ZimWiki
All of these things make it harder to use and less likely to stay supported.
> Nixos is possibly makes it more confusing by having the documentation recommend `nix-channel --add` instead of the declarative approach. Having the standard declarative, and having flakes on top
So... I agree that that's annoying, and I personally would prefer that everyone agree to use flakes, but AFAIK you don't need to do that to enable unfree in nix? Or is this an unrelated argument against nix that's separate from the point about unfree software?
Iran probably has had the capability to build one for some time, the reason they haven't done it is because is not their policy. And they adhere to international regulation and audits to make sure everything is compliant
But if their sovereignty keeps being threatened who knows
April 16, 2021
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/iran-nuclear-unanium-enrichment...
"Iran said on Friday that it had begun enriching uranium to the higher level. The country has said it intends to use the 60% enriched product for radio-pharmaceuticals, which can be used to treat diseases including cancer."
100%, I won't replace x11 it until I feel all my automation tools work correctly or the "way.." alternative is better
Was just making the parallel with Wayland, how frustrating it has been for a lot of people, how everyone preaching correct software design, should be simple/protocols/standards/modular with correct responsibilities between projects... and how fast everyone forgot it
My child under 10 has a tablet. She can message the family, draw, make videos, take pictures, has a album, some musics. Some, limited time, video cartoons and mostly educational games
Companies should provide better tolling to help parents follow their children online. Especially now with AI would be quite easy to make smart policies